
Dr. Daniel Charous
Dr. Daniel Charous is a board-certified ENT physician with a long-standing Arizona practice. Arizona Desert ENT describes him as leading a team of experienced providers who work within their specialties to deliver patient care.
If one or both sides of your nose always feel blocked, the problem may be structural. Septoplasty and turbinate reduction can help open the nasal airway for the right candidate.

Find out what is actually blocking your nose.
Care for nasal blockage in Goodyear with septoplasty and turbinate reduction support.
If your nose feels blocked for months, especially on one side or every night, the issue may be structural. A deviated septum, enlarged turbinates, or both can limit airflow no matter how many temporary fixes you try.
Nasal blockage can come from more than congestion. A deviated septum can narrow one side of the airway, while enlarged turbinates can crowd the space your air needs to move through. Septoplasty and turbinate reduction are designed to address those structural problems when they are the right fit.
The first step is not committing to surgery. It is getting a clear ENT evaluation so you know what is causing the blockage, what can be treated conservatively, and what procedural options may help.
Schedule ConsultationA modern care path designed to make the next step clear.
The specialist can review your symptoms, examine your nasal airway, and explain whether septoplasty, turbinate reduction, or a different plan makes sense. No pressure to decide before you understand your options.

Dr. Daniel Charous is a board-certified ENT physician with a long-standing Arizona practice. Arizona Desert ENT describes him as leading a team of experienced providers who work within their specialties to deliver patient care.
Arizona Desert Ear, Nose & Throat Specialists is a team-based ENT practice led by experienced providers working within their specialties.
The goal is practical: easier nasal breathing, fewer nights spent struggling for airflow, and a clearer understanding of whether a structural treatment path is worth pursuing. Results vary, but clarity should start at the consultation.
Ongoing blockage can be related to inflammation, allergies, a deviated septum, enlarged turbinates, prior injury, or a combination of factors. An ENT evaluation helps identify what is actually limiting airflow.
Septoplasty addresses a crooked or deviated septum, while turbinate reduction reduces enlarged tissue inside the nose that can narrow airflow. Some patients need one, some need both, and some need a different plan.
Not automatically. The right first step is an evaluation. Conservative care may be appropriate for some patients, while structural treatment may be discussed when anatomy is a major part of the problem.
Recovery varies based on the procedure and your medical situation. During a consultation, the team can explain what the expected recovery window and follow-up may look like for your plan.
During a septoplasty and turbinate reduction consultation, Dr. Charous will review your symptoms, medical history, and how long you’ve had trouble breathing through your nose. They may examine the inside of your nose with a small scope or imaging, check for a deviated septum, enlarged turbinates, allergies, or sinus issues, and explain whether medication or a procedure is the best next step. You’ll also have time to ask questions about the procedure, recovery, risks, and expected breathing improvement.
The best way to know if this is right for you is a direct conversation with Dr. Charous.
Schedule ConsultationIf your nose always feels blocked, it is worth finding out why. Start with a focused consultation and get a clearer path before deciding on any treatment.